What is it about?

This study examines the information needs and fasting habits of Egyptian Muslims during Ramadan. This study, conducted April 13 to May 12, 2021, used a self-administered questionnaire which served as the survey instrument. Almost all respondents ranked topics related to health, fasting (such as Da’wah, E’tikaaf, and Taraweeh Prayer), as well as religious lectures and Islamic sermons, as the most important information. During Ramadan, respondents relied on a variety of fasting-related information sources, including print and non-print, as well as face to face and virtual conversations, and social media.. The most significant barriers affecting respondents’ search for information during Ramadan were fatigue and physical exhaustion, invasion of privacy, time constraints, and lack of trust in some sources. Despite its significance, respondents’ information-seeking behavior has received insufficient serious research on a local, regional, and even international scale. Gaps in the knowledge of the study of fasting and its effects can greatly assist healthcare professionals in developing a good understanding of religious fasting and its practitioners.

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Why is it important?

Knowledge gaps in the study of fasting and its effects can significantly help healthcare professionals gain a good undrstanding of fasting and its practitioners. This group of information users is being studied to see if there is a link between their fasting, which lasts approximately fourteen hours daily during the blessed month of Ramadan, and their information behavior, or if fasting has any effect on this behavior. It attempts to investigate this group’s information-seeking behavior in terms of thoughts, attitudes, practises, preferences, tools, and factors influencing information use.

Perspectives

Religious scholars, Library and Information science specialists and professionals

Professor (Full), Essam Mansour, Head of Department of library & information science (DLIS), SVU Essam Mansour
South Valley Univeristy (SVU)

Read the Original

This page is a summary of: Egyptian Muslims’ Information-Seeking Behaviour during Ramadan Fasting: A Survey, Journal of Religious & Theological Information, April 2022, Taylor & Francis,
DOI: 10.1080/10477845.2022.2063584.
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